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Songs of Willow Frost

Jamie Ford
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Plot Summary

Songs of Willow Frost

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2013

Plot Summary

Songs of Willow Frost is a work of historical fiction by Jamie Ford. First published in 2013, the plot follows a Chinese-American boy who doesn’t believe his mother is dead and who sets out to prove she’s still alive. The book received positive reviews following its release and critics praise it for its emotional heart. Ford is an internationally bestselling novelist with books published in over 30 languages. Songs of Willow Frost is his second novel. He also writes short steampunk stories.

The protagonist in Songs of Willow Frost is William Eng. He’s 12, and he lives at the Sacred Heart Orphanage in Seattle. He’s lived at Sacred Heart ever since his mother, Liu Song, died when he was seven. He recalls the day she died and how horrifying it was to see strangers carry her out of their apartment. He doesn’t remember much else about her because he was so young when she died.

William doesn’t like Sacred Heart much. He’s the only Chinese-American student, and the other boys ignore him. In 1930’s America, there isn’t much hope of families adopting children who aren’t white Americans, and William doesn’t think anyone will adopt him. The nuns who teach at Sacred Heart don’t support him very well and they don’t pick up on his loneliness. More than anything, William longs for the day that he’s old enough to leave the orphanage.



William describes his time at Sacred Heart. He only knows he’s stayed there five years because he’s celebrated five birthdays there. Birthdays at Sacred Heart aren’t like regular birthdays. There’s a birthday day once a year for all the girls, and the boys all celebrate a birthday another day. No one gets their own special day. Most of the children can’t remember when their real birthdays are. This is one of the many ways the nuns erode the children’s identities.

One day, the nuns treat the boys to a cinema trip. Field trips are few and far between, and the boys are excited to leave Sacred Heart. They visit the Moore Theatre. William can’t wait to watch the show and forget his troubles for a while. However, when the movie begins, he realizes his troubles are just beginning.

The actress looks very familiar to William. She looks exactly like his mother. William doesn’t know how to react. He can’t enjoy the film because he’s so busy obsessing over the woman. The other boys think he’s crazy, and the nuns remind him that his mother’s dead. William, however, suspects that the nuns are lying, although he doesn’t know why.



The only friend William has at Sacred Heart is a young, shy girl called Charlotte. Charlotte’s blind and the other children ignore her. William’s always been kind to her. When William returns to the orphanage, he asks Charlotte if she thinks he’s crazy. Charlotte says there’s only one way to find out the truth, and that’s by investigating William’s mother’s death.

William and Charlotte escape Sacred Heart by hiding in the library book mobile. This gets wheeled in and out of Sacred Heart, and the nuns encourage the children to read. William and Charlotte hide underneath a pile of books, and they venture out into Seattle’s daunting streets. Now that they’re wandering around Seattle, they know they need a plan.

William discovers where the woman from the cinema screen is performing. He finds out how to get to the theater and he goes looking for her. He waits for her to leave her next performance and asks for her autograph. The woman recognizes William right away. William is convinced she’s his mother. When she signs an autograph under the name of Liu Song, William knows he’s right.



Liu asks William to come backstage with her. William doesn’t know what to feel. On one hand, he’s thrilled to find his mother. On the other hand, he truly believed she was dead. Liu explains that, although she looked dead when she left the apartment, she wasn’t. Doctors gave her drugs so they could take her to an asylum for unwed mothers.

William doesn’t understand how he fits into this. Liu explains that her uncle raped her, and she had a late-term miscarriage. She was taken to the asylum to have the dead baby removed. She  had to also give up custody of William to the orphanage unless she wanted her uncle to raise him. Naturally, Liu doesn’t want her rapist uncle anywhere near William.

William suspects there’s more to the story, and he’s right. Liu’s uncle is also his father. Her uncle wanted to control her and he’s the reason why she ended up in an asylum. Once she got out, she didn’t expect to see William again and so she made a new life for herself. She wishes she could turn the clock back.



Meanwhile, the nuns find William and Charlotte and insist they go back to Sacred Heart. The nuns still have legal custody of William, and so there’s not much Liu can do. Liu lets William go, but she promises to get him back. When Songs of Willow Frost ends, Liu’s gathering her money together and taking a train over to Sacred Heart.
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